US animation company to open £28m Glasgow studio

Los Angeles will remain the home of Halon’s headquarters.

By contributor Lucinda Cameron, PA Scotland
Published
Actors pose for cameras at a screening for The Batman in London
Halon has worked on films including The Batman (Ian West/PA)

A Los Angeles-based animation and visualisation company which has worked on The Batman and Star Wars series The Mandalorian is to open a new studio in Scotland.

Halon Entertainment will invest £28 million in the studio in Glasgow, creating up to 250 jobs over the next three years.

The company has worked on films such as the Planet of the Apes franchise and Mission: Impossible – The Final Reckoning in recent years, and has also worked on the video game Fortnite.

Halon said it has been attracted to Glasgow by its skilled workforce in areas including computer graphics, animation and digital technology as well as its facilities and its “world-renowned academic institutions”.

Chris Ferriter, president of Halon Entertainment, said: “With production happening across the globe, expanding our full-service studios on both sides of the Atlantic allows us to better support our clients with world-class services and top-tier talent, no matter where projects take them.

“Our new Scotland studio strengthens our ability to collaborate seamlessly across time zones and deliver exceptional work to even more productions worldwide.”

Halon said that Los Angeles will remain the home of its headquarters and the studio in Glasgow will complement and strengthen its operations.

Scotland’s Culture Secretary Angus Robertson said: “I greatly welcome this major investment from Halon Entertainment, which is a huge endorsement of the skills, talent and experience that Glasgow offers and the strength of Scotland’s screen sector overall.

“It marks a major boost for the digital tech, film, TV and games industries, reinforcing Scotland’s position as a global hub for creative technology.

“Together with Scottish Enterprise and Screen Scotland, the Scottish Government is committed to accelerating the growth of our screen sector.

“Inward investment like this is a key driver of that growth and the cultural and economic opportunities that come with that, including hundreds of good, well-paying jobs.”

A view of the Glasgow skyline
Halon will open a studio in Glasgow (Jane Barlow/PA)

Scotland’s national economic development agency Scottish Enterprise is providing Halon with advisory services and £3.9 million of funding towards the overall project cost.

Adrian Gillespie, chief executive of Scottish Enterprise, said: “It’s a huge win that an ambitious US studio has chosen Scotland as its location to expand and scale up.

“Its presence will enhance the reputation of the country’s digital tech industry, and of Glasgow as a hub of artistic and technical talent.

“It’s also a brilliant opportunity for animators and visual artists to help develop innovative creative content for movies, series and video games right here in Scotland.”

Screen Scotland also welcomed the news from Halon.

Isabel Davis, executive director of Screen Scotland, said: “We are delighted it has chosen Scotland as its UK base, thanks to the depth of our animation and visual effects talent across film, TV and video games.

“Scotland’s globally competitive offer is backed up by the UK’s recently-enhanced visual effects tax credit alongside a range of support from Screen Scotland.”